Vivitar V3800N

From Camera-wiki.org
Revision as of 16:40, 3 April 2022 by Voxphoto (talk | contribs) (Using Wayback Machine snapshot from Adorama to confirm intro by 2002)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Vivitar V3800N is a Pentax K mount manual-focus 35mm SLR announced by Vivitar beginning circa 2001,[1] with a relaunch promotional push beginning in 2009.[2] The V3800N remained in production at least into 2012, with list price of $299 USD (w/28-70mm zoom lens) or $239 USD (w/50mm lens). Some remaining stock was available for sale new as late as 2017.[3] The camera was manufactured by Phenix, and is also seen as the Phenix DC303N. It may be related to the Yashica FX-3 Super 2000.

With a PC connector for off-camera flash, and improving on the V3000 by adding multiple-exposure and depth-of-field preview buttons, the V3800N is one of the more full-featured of the Vivitar V series SLRs.

There appear to be two color variants of the camera body: one is all black while the other is black with a grey top housing. The Promaster 2500PK Super and Hikari 2002 appear to be nearly-identical cameras with slightly altered styling.

Specifications

  • Badging: Vivitar
  • Manufacturer: Phenix
  • Lens mount: Pentax K
  • ISO: 25 - 3200
  • Shutter: Vertical travel, electronic metal focal plane shutter
  • Shutter Speeds: 1/2000 to 1 sec, Bulb
  • Flash sync: Hot shoe, X-sync PC connector, 1/125
  • Viewfinder: eye-level pentaprism, 0.91x magnification, LED exposure indicators
  • Focusing: Horizontal split image w/micro-prism collar
  • Meter: TTL, center-weighted averaging (SPD cell)
  • Battery: 1.55v LR44, SR44 or equivalent (x2)
  • Weight:


Photos



Notes

  1. A web archive from January 2002 shows US retailer Adorama offering the V3800N for $199.95 with a 50/1.7 lens and $229.95 with a 28-70 zoom; via the Wayback Machine.
  2. This occurred after Sakar acquired the brand out of bankruptcy, noted in a 2009 TechRadar.com posting
  3. In a Facebook post the U.S. retailer Freestyle announced they had finally sold their last V3800N's in March 2017; some of these cameras had been unsold and returned stock from other "Big Box" retail chains.

Links